HE'S journeyed through America From Canso Cape to Horn, And from East Indian Comorin To Behring's Strait forlorn; He's felled trees in the backwoods, In swamps has gasped for breath; In Tropic heats, in Polar ice, Has often prayed for death. He has fought and bled in civil wars Of no concern to him, Has shot his fellows -- beasts and men -- At risk of life and limb. He has suffered fluxes, fevers, Agues, and ills allied, And now he's home. You look at him As he talks by your fireside. And what is written in his glance Stressed by such foreign wear, After such alien circumstance What does his face declare? His mother's; she who saw him not After his starting year, Who never left her native spot, And lies in the churchyard near. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPIGRAM: A LAME BEGGAR by JOHN DONNE THE DEBT by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR TO HIS CONSCIENCE by ROBERT HERRICK A TERRE (BEING THE PHILOSOPHY OF MANY SOLDIERS) by WILFRED OWEN THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 54. LOVE'S FATALITY by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI THE ITALICS ARE RICHARD GIFFORD'S by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS THE SALZBURG CHIMES by HENRY ALFORD TWILIGHT SYMPHONY by LESLIE ANDERSON THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER (DEDICATED TO MISS ELLA F. KENNEDY) by SARA S. BASHEFKIN |